Plants and processes in wetlands: A background
PI Boon and MA Brock
Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 45(8) 1369 - 1374
Abstract It is easy to gain an impression from the recent contents of Australian scientific journals dealing with
ecological research that little attention is paid to the botanical ecology of Australia's inland wetlands. Less
than 1% of the papers published in key Australian ecological journals over 1987-93 dealt with some aspect
of the vegetation ecology of these environments. Yet over the period 1982-94 research on this topic
accounted for up to 23% of the papers presented at annual conferences of the two major Australian
scientific societies to which Australian limnologists are likely to belong. This discrepancy indicates that
wetland vegetation is the subject of a considerable research effort by Australian limnologists, but that few
of their research findings are published in refereed Australian journals. Analyses of the references cited in
key review articles suggests that refereed journals outside Australia cannot account fully for the 'missing'
publications: we demonstrate that much research is placed in the largely inaccessible 'grey literature'
published by government departments and the like. It is also possible that some research is destined never
to be published. This imbalance between the intensity of the research effort and the history of publication in
Australian refereed journals prompted local scientists involved in wetland research to participate in a
Special Issue dedicated to the botanical and process-oriented aspects of wetland ecology.
Full text doi:10.1071/MF9941369
© CSIRO 1994





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